Avoid Car Lock-outs

I grew up in “Lynn, Lynn, city of sin” – so one of the first things my parents impressed upon me was the necessity of closing the windows and locking the doors on our family car whenever we got out. That worked well until the day my father stopped at a store with my sister and me, and we duly locked the doors … to find that Dad had left the key in the ignition :-(

He grumbled as we walked home (only a half mile, but he’d also need to walk back with my mother’s car key) and thus taught me to always carry a spare car key in my wallet to avoid this problem – because no matter how careful you are, a second’s distraction can lock you out, perhaps much further than half a mile from home.

But as cars have become more high-tech over the years, so have their keys. Chances are that your car key now has a thick plastic head containing a programmed electronic chip that interacts with your ignition switch lock to allow the car to start, like this:

Standard Subaru key

Subaru key with chip-embedded head

However, if your key is locked inside the car you don’t need to use the spare key to start it, only to get inside to access the other key. So as long as you have one door with an actual keyhole (my Subaru only has a keyhole on the driver’s door, since they expect that normally I will unlock the car with the remote fob) you can go to your local locksmith and have him/her make you a “naked” key without the chip head, which will fit in your wallet with minimal bulk:

Naked/headless subaru key

Naked/headless Subaru key

Do check your manual if your car has a security system, to understand whether using a naked key will set off an alarm – and if so put a note into your wallet with the key detailing how to STOP the alarm! (e.g., some cars require you to insert a headed key into the ignition and turn it on/off X times).

To keep this key from sliding out of my wallet, I wrap it in a $20 bill (having also learned to keep emergency money for a cab or other use), and if I don’t have a zipped/velcro’d closed wallet slot I put it in a sleeve with my ATM card:

Key in wallet

Key in wallet

One final tip: if you also want to guard against losing your key after successfully remembering to take it with you, hide a fully functional chip-headed key somewhere inside your car (not the glove box, unless it has a good lock; duct-tape it under the carpet in the trunk or somewhere else not obvious if you forget to actually lock your car door) so that once your spare key gets you inside the car you can still drive home.

5 thoughts on “Avoid Car Lock-outs

  1. I know it should go w/out saying, but sometimes those are the things that ought to be mentioned somewhere, so here goes…

    Never, never, never do this with your house key. If you lose your wallet/purse, or it’s stolen, the person who ends up with it will not only know where you live from the ID that’s in there, but will also have the key to the front door.

    • Quite right, Ted! And I’m not going to post how and where I have arranged for a spare house key >;-0

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  3. Hi,
    I am know to sometimes have a memory of a gold fish. So I managed to leave my keys inside my car last week and for some reason this new Subaru has a “function” where the car locks it’s doors after a while without asking me anything. Now I am desperately looking for the spare key but can not simply find it anywhere. Do you think that one of these “naked” keys could solve my problem?

    • It depends: does your Subaru have a manual key cylinder on the driver’s door? If yes, then you can probably use the naked key to unlock the door. Some cars now do not have a manual key cylinder at all anymore.

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